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Bush’s Big Government Gambit

By Ken Blackwell

Although President George W. Bush succeeded with some of his policies, the bailout of the Detroit Three is possibly his most significant mistake. The recent damage he’s done to the Republican brand will take leadership with a command focus to repair. The president’s mistake could repeat the hardship Americans experienced the last time we went down this path early in the last century.

Setting aside President Bush’s successes on such fronts as protecting the homeland against terrorists, his failures have been noteworthy. Some, such as the federal response to Hurricane Katrina, came about because Mayor Ray Nagin’s incompetence was surpassed only by that of Governor Kathleen Blanco. Others, such as the nomination of Harriet Miers to the Supreme Court, were entirely his fault.

But the past three months have seen terrible decisions with long-term consequences. As markets declined, President Bush signed onto massive government bailouts of banks, then other financial institutions that started calling themselves banks. Now, he’s agreed to give a massive bailout to three American automakers that have stubbornly persisted in clinging to failed business plans that leave them in the red, straggled into insolvency by crippling union contracts.

To be fair to President Bush, the bailout failure could not have happened without the Democrat-controlled Congress, led by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. Even Senator John McCain had a hand in this situation.

Polls showed voters were against the first bailout 90-10 when it passed. Subsequent polls had voters opposed to it 75-22 on Election Day. Had Mr. McCain taken the conservative line opposing these bailouts, and criticized Senator Barack Obama for supporting the president’s plan, he would have finished stronger.

But none of that excuses President Bush’s decision to give $17 billion of taxpayer money to the Detroit Three, postponing their need to make fundamental changes to their business models. This giveaway radically expanded the reach of the federal government in a manner only seen in socialist nations. Worse, he attached paltry, optional conditions to that federal largesse, leaving the door open to the next administration to waive those requirements completely and use the GOP for political cover.

Out of all the options available to President Bush, he took the worst-possible course.

His actions may not even be legal. Congress considered this bailout and rejected it, while Mr. Bush’s treasury secretary publicly said that using the original bailout funds for automakers would be unlawful without congressional action. The legality of these actions cannot be challenged unless the right party brings a lawsuit, but the fact that ordinary taxpayers cannot bring a lawsuit against federal spending does not change the fact that everyone agreed the first bailout could not be extended to automakers. President Bush therefore usurped the legislative function, doing something Congress refused to do.

The federal government’s shoulders are not big enough to carry a $13 trillion economy. A system of limited government cannot control enough of our economy to fully stave off the consequences of widespread recklessness. Painful corrections are inevitable.

The parallels to the 1920s and 1930s are remarkable. Republican President Calvin Coolidge was a staunch conservative, presiding over the Roaring Twenties. Republican President Herbert Hoover was a moderate who tried major government intervention in the face of the economic downturn of 1929, with disastrous results. This then gave an excuse to incoming Democrat President Franklin Roosevelt to radically expand the federal government, spending untold sums in an effort to end the Great Depression.

But those efforts failed miserably. They did nothing to ameliorate the Great Depression, which instead got even worse in the late 1930s after five years of FDR’s New Deal programs. It was only World War II - the largest military conflict in world history - that finally revived this nation’s economy.

We must learn from these bitter lessons of history. Like Mr. Coolidge, President Ronald Reagan was a conservative whose policies laid the foundation for long-term economic growth. Like Mr. Hoover, President Bush is a moderate who is trying to tackle an economic downturn with big-government intervention. Enter President-elect Obama, promising to emulate Mr. Roosevelt with an unprecedented, radical expansion of the federal government.

Only Republicans offer the conservative principles that can address our economic woes. Since our outgoing president has abandoned those principles - and never adhered to some of them - the GOP must speak with a different voice. The GOP must be the voice of reason before America goes past the point of no return in trading a capitalist economy for a socialist state.

Everyone who knows President Bush will tell you he is an extraordinarily warm and pleasant person, and a true gentleman. Contrary to the left’s portrayal of him, Mr. Bush is full of compassion.

But that is not enough. Some industries need change that government cannot provide. In a free market, company mismanagement and union shortsightedness result in corporate reorganization, not government involvement at the cost of countless billions of dollars that only delays the inevitable.

The Republican Party was once the champion of limited government and economic freedom. President Bush’s recent actions have thoroughly distorted that image. It will take strong leadership for the GOP to reclaim its small government and free market reputation.

Gov. Blago picks Burris for Senate seat

Arming Against the Thugs

By Stephen Roberts

In the summer of 2008, police in Washington, D.C. set up military-style checkpoints to stop vehicles without a “legitimate purpose” from entering the city’s Trinidad neighborhood.  It was a bold attempt to stop the murders and violent crimes plaguing the area.

During next year’s inauguration of Barack Obama, that same police force is already warning it will not be able to provide adequate protection to revelers taking advantage of extended drinking hours at bars and nightclubs throughout the city.

In 2002, when Shelley Parker discovered the Capitol Hill home she had recently bought was located on a block where men gathered to drink beer and possibly sell drugs, she got a dog for protection, installed a security camera and joined an anti-crime patrol.  These actions earned her taunts and death threats from the men and vandalism to her home and car.

Seeking advice on protecting herself, a police officer told Parker to get a gun.  This was unhelpful, since most gun ownership in Washington was illegal.

Guns are often used to commit violent crimes, but might they also be an answer for cities suffering from crime?

St. Louis Alderman Charles Quincy Troupe thinks so, and suggests citizens arm themselves. The Associated Press quotes him as saying: “The community has to be ready to defend itself, because it’s clear the economy is going to get worse, and criminals are getting more bold.”

Troupe notes that a St. Louis district police commander told him that “there was nothing he could do to protect us and the community… that he didn’t have the manpower.”

Like Washington, St. Louis has an unacceptably high crime rate.  With ten being the least safe, St. Louis and Washington both earn a rating of eight regarding “violent crime” on the Sperling’s BestPlaces data analysis website.  The national average is three.

It’s clear that something must be done, and current methods aren’t working.

Peace and justice are only as strong as peoples’ will and power to maintain it.  A prospective criminal must be presented with fearsome consequences or crime will flourish.

But so many police forces are overwhelmed and incarceration is not always an effective deterrent.  Prison these days is just as likely to provide “street cred” as it is to induce shame. It makes many criminals more hardened and more sophisticated in their methods.  The U.S. Department of Justice reports that two-thirds of released prisoners are rearrested within three years.

Crime thrives in the vacuum created by insufficient law enforcement and deterrence.  That is why it’s time that law-abiding citizens exercise their constitutional right to arm themselves.

Kennesaw, Georgia actually passed a law in 1982 requiring households to have a gun.  The city’s crime rate fell drastically afterwards.  There were 55 house burglaries in the year before the law, for example, but 26 the year after and only 11 several years later.  In 2007, Family Circle magazine ranked Kennesaw one of the top-ten cities in America for families.

With such laws on the books and an active citizenry, prospective criminals have to weigh whether his potential misdeeds are worth putting his life at risk.

What about Shelley Parker?  She sued the D.C. government for the right to own a gun.  This past June, the U.S. Supreme Court agreed with her and struck down the city’s gun ban.

As Alderman Troupe’s call to arms was being reported on news programs across the country, a lesser-known story circulated in St. Louis - the shooting death of a 22-year-old police officer named Norvelle Brown.

While such tragedy often precedes calls for fewer guns, the better response is for law-abiding citizens to work hard at promoting and nurturing good in their community, as well as being willing to stop evil… even if it is found at the end of a gun.

#  #  #

Stephen Roberts, M.Div. is a research associate for the Project 21 black leadership network and seminary graduate.  Comments may be sent to Project21@nationalcenter.org.

The Wolf is at the Door

By Frances Marie Smith

The JIG is UP and we are now in a” Depression”.  Officially no, but many parts of America - like Detroit and large manufacturing areas are in a Depression.  But nevertheless, we must deal with the coming depression.  Years ago, during the early 1990s, I read a book called “The Great Reckoning” - by James Davidson.  If you have any time please read this book.  This book has been a great resource.  As America begins to Nationalize just about everything this book will help guide you through some of the tough economic times to come.  I was telling someone who knows Davidson personally that his work has been of great inspiration to me.  He also wrote about the New American Gangsters - mobs - that will be created as a result of nationalizing our economy. .

The New American Gangsters
The jig is up while the wolf is as the door, references the fact that most of the financial mess was not created by Republicans but by Democrats and now its time for Republicans to stop crying over spilled milk and tell the American people the truth about how the deregulation begun under Reubenomics.  Yes, it was Robert Reuben who created many of the financial instruments that we are dealing with now.  But, the GOP will need a strong “Posse” in order to hold back the corruption that will plague the “New American System”.  If folks think that things are bad now, just wait until 2010, 11, 12 and 14 comes, things are about to get extremely crazy.

Obamanomics will only try and create some sense of stability and confidence back to the American people.  But the fundamentals of the underline economy will really have to be dealt with by Republicans.  It will take the fiscal Republicans who have a clear and keen sense of policy to ensure that Democrats don’t mess the financial markets up again.   The top gun, Larry Summers is tough time will tell if he is tough enough to deal with what is coming down the pike.   I don’t care how smart you are; some times you can get stumped on some of the simple things in life.   As most of you know, Summers has been classified as being arrogant and strong willed.  But if he doesn’t play the game with a keen and mild head, the time bomb will explode.  Summers is extremely good, but he will need the support of women, to help turn this economy around.   Larry will have to get in front, and not navigate the ship behind the scenes.

Summers will now have to deal with the Banks and their lending practices.  Banks, right now won’t lend not because they don’t want to, but they can’t.  The rationale is not the conventional reason that most people would think of.  The Wolf can be exposed for being a wolf, but I realized that many of the GOP leaders couldn’t speak out because many of these folks are truly their friends.  No matter how rogue folks are in life, many of the political elite must be silent.  This has placed the Republican Party in what I call a “Strangle”. As the new Clinton Cartels form within the Obama Administration, Republicans had better gear up for a big fight.  We are out numbered now, but with some great engineering techniques, the love affair on the left will soon come to an end.

The Clinton Years
During the Clinton Administration Reubenomics allowed for fiscally irresponsibility by deregulating the markets and allowing everyone to sell products that didn’t have a clear understanding on how the products really work.  Bankers should be bankers, Insurance agents should be insurance agents and Investment Consultants should be investment consultants, but when you try and have a  “Jack of All Trades” deregulation created a “Master of None”.  Now, we are truly experiencing all the “JACKS” loosing their positions. When deregulation happened, the banker was in competition with the insurance agent and the insurance agent was in competition with the broker.  This caused massive selling with few little customers.  So, if there was going to be massive selling, then you will need a larger audience to sell to and that’s how the entire financial mess sold to the American people who were ripe for the taking.

Reform is what we need in our financial markets, but Republicans will need to repackage the American Brand.  Take the advice of James Carvel, Democratic strategist he said that the Republican Party was still stuck in the 70s 80s and 90s.  Our message does not go over well with the “New America”.  If the Republican Party is not ready for the Big Tent, then the Big Tent will over take the Republican Party whether they like it or not.

Don’t let the Wolf fool you!

Obama’s Big Mistake: ‘Deficits Don’t Matter’

By Herman Cain

President-elect Barack Obama has made a big mistake that, as usual, the mainstream media has given him a pass on by not making a big deal about it.

It’s not his cabinet nominations, which the mainstream media are all gushy about. It’s not whether he or any of his staff can be linked to the sale of his Illinois Senate seat by “caught red-handed but I didn’t do it” Gov. Rod Blagojevich.

And it is certainly not who Obama has chosen to pray at his inauguration. It’s his inauguration for peace sake!

“We can’t worry, short-term, about the deficit” is what Obama stated two weeks ago on Meet The Press. Deficits don’t matter.

Big mistake!

That is the last message that needs to be sent to a spend-happy Congress controlled by Democrats, where trillion has become the new billion.

When Vice President-elect Joe Biden was asked about the “deficits don’t matter” statement a week later on a different show, he defended it with pride by saying that their first priority is to get the economy moving again.

Let’s try a few metaphors to shed some light on the misguided thinking that “deficits don’t matter”: Pouring gasoline on a fire, giving a six-year-old kid a loaded gun or giving a shopping mall maniac a no-limit credit card.

If you destroy the economy it will never get moving again.

Economist Brian Wesbury published an article on his web site, dated December 8, 2008, explaining the folly of “deficits don’t matter” thinking. More importantly, he described several alternatives for stimulating the economy with something other than another “toothless” stimulus package.

Wesbury’s suggestions included eliminating corporate taxes altogether during most of 2009, a 50 percent reduction in individual income taxes, or allowing full expensing of equipment and investments made by businesses.

Those ideas would keep billions of dollars directly in the economy, rather than funneling those dollars through the federal government to become polluted with pet political projects and the usual inefficiencies.

Of course none of those ideas would appeal to Harry Reid, Nancy Pelosi and the other liberals who believe in more taxes, bigger government and less individual responsibility.

Congress has collectively been in denial for decades that deficits do matter. This is why we have over $50 trillion in unfunded liabilities associated with Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid.

This is also why we have a growing national debt in excess of $10 trillion, while partisan political fanatics focus more on who is to blame than what to do to fix the problem.

One of any president’s responsibilities is to set the tone for the direction of the country, and the tone for how we should deal with our most pressing issues. Sending Congress a message that deficits don’t matter is way off key.

We are all hopeful that Obama will be a successful president. The nation needs him to be successful, and it is unrealistic to expect him to be perfect in all of his decisions. He will make some mistakes.

But a big mistake before he even takes office is not encouraging.

Deficits do matter. Business and economic history books are littered with casualties who believed otherwise.

© 2008 North Star Writers Group. May not be republished without permission.

The awkward co-dependence of blacks and liberal Democrats

By Star Parker

What does Caroline Kennedy have in common with black America? If your answer is not much, I’d tend to agree with you.

When I think of Caroline, I think of Manhattan and Park Avenue, not the Bronx and Brooklyn. I think of Brentwood and Beverly Hills, not Watts and South Central Los Angeles.

But there is something that Caroline and black America do have in common. The Democratic Party.

Whether Kennedy succeeds in her effort to slide into Hillary Clinton’s soon-to-be-vacated Senate seat will have little to do with her Democratic Party bona fides. Per her policy positions ticked off the other day, she is in perfect and predictable liberal alignment with party boilerplate. If she fails, it will be for reasons other than her views.

So what exactly is the common political ground that Kennedy bluebloods share with the 90 percent of America’s blacks who vote for Democrats?

A careful look shows the deep internal contradictions of the Democratic Party and the complexity of the political psyche of black Americans.

Ironically, despite Democratic Party rhetoric about economic inequities and wealth and income gaps in America, those gaps are more pronounced inside the Democratic tent than inside the Republican one.

According to exit polls from November’s election, Barack Obama captured the vote of America’ richest and America’s poorest. Fifty-two percent of those with incomes over $200,000 voted for Obama and more than 60 percent of those earning under $30,000 did.

Our wealthiest senator, John Kerry, is a Democrat, as is our wealthiest House member, Jane Harman.

The nation’s two wealthiest men, Bill Gates and Warren Buffett are both, by all indication, Democrats.

What political aspirations can black Americans, whose median income lags the nation’s share with these multimillionaires and billionaires?

There is little common ground regarding values.

Church attendance correlates reliably over time with party affiliation, and this remained true in this last election. Those who attend church frequently vote Republican. Those who don’t usually vote Democratic. Except blacks.

Blacks, in fact, have the highest church attendance in the country. Seventy-six percent of black Democrats attend church at least monthly. Sixty-seven percent of Republicans do and 50 percent of white Democrats do.

A recent Gallup poll shows blacks more aligned with Republicans than Democrats on social issues — moral acceptability of homosexuality, abortion, and sexual promiscuity.

On energy and environmental issues, blacks poll more closely with conservatives than with liberals. It’s because these are pocketbook issues. Working blacks have little interest in paying the higher taxes and bearing the higher costs that will result from chasing global warming windmills and displacing cheap hydrocarbon energy with exotic government-subsidized alternatives. Lower energy costs also put blacks on the side of offshore drilling for oil and gas.

How about education? Wealthy liberals, despite having their own kids in private schools, oppose school choice. When a black family is given the opportunity to pull its child out of a failing public school and send him or her to a church school or another alternative, they are grateful.

So where’s the common ground? Income redistribution. A recent Zogby poll shows 80 percent of Democrats, 90 percent of liberals, and 76 percent of blacks supporting taxing the wealthy to give money back to low-income Americans.

Despite everything else, blacks vote to stay on the liberal plantation. Pop psychologists would call the relationship between wealthy liberals and blacks co-dependence.

Republicans are wrong if they think they’ll win blacks on social issues alone. They need to help blacks understand that limited government provides the economic mobility and opportunity they need and that the welfare, redistribution state does the opposite. They must help blacks gain self-confidence so that they can enjoy the benefits that can only come from freedom.

So far, Republicans have failed to do this. Which is another reason why they now sit on the outside looking in.

Unstoppable Solar Cycles: Climate Change is not man made

Christmas - What Child is This?

The First Christmas

“Scrooge” Bush Fails to Pardon Border Agents

Black Leader Condemns Continued Bush Refusal of Christmas Pardon or Commutation for Law Enforcement Officers Jailed While Doing Their Duty

For Release: December 24, 2008
Contact: David Almasi at (703) 568-4727 or dalmasi@nationalcenter.org

After yet another round of presidential pardons failed to free imprisoned Border Patrol agents Ignacio Ramos and Jose Alonso Compean, Mychal Massie - the chairman of the Project 21 black leadership network - is declaring President George W. Bush the official Scrooge of the 2008 Christmas season.

“George Bush may have his stocking hung with care above one of the White House’s many chimneys, but he deserves nothing but coal in it this year,” said Project 21’s Massie. “The deplorable treatment of Ramos and Compean make President Bush this year’s official Scrooge.  I say this with the remembrance that Ebenezer Scrooge reached the conclusion that he suffered from wrong-mindedness.  No one denies the actions of these incarcerated Border Patrol agents may have been contrary to protocol, but their stiff sentences far outweigh their actions at the time.  These brave men have been punished enough, and I am stunned by the President’s unwillingness to do the right thing.”

Ramos and Compean, incarcerated since January 2007, are serving jail sentences of 11 and 12 years, respectively.  Most of their time has been served in solitary confinement.  Massie has repeatedly asked President Bush to show leniency to Ramos and Compean.

Ramos and Compean were prosecuted for an incident that occurred in February 2005 on the U.S.-Mexico border near El Paso, Texas.  They chased Osvaldo Aldrete-Davila on foot after he abandoned a van containing 743 pounds of marijuana worth an estimated $1 million.  During the chase, Ramos shot at Aldrete-Davila after Ramos thought he saw Aldrete-Davila draw a gun.  Aldrete-Davila escaped across the U.S.-Mexico border, and Ramos assumed Aldrete-Davila was unhurt.  In fact, Aldrete-Davila had been shot in the buttock.  U.S. Attorney Johnny Sutton later charged Ramos and Compean for pursuing Aldrete-Davila without supervisor approval, moving spent shell casings and improperly reporting the fired shots.

Aldrete-Davila was granted immunity to testify against Ramos and Compean.  He recently plead guilty to charges that he conspired to smuggle marijuana into the United States twice after he was granted immunity and faces a jail term of between five and 40 years and $2 million in fines (although The Washington Times cited a source who claims Aldrete-Davila may only serve six to 10 years in exchange for his plea).

Among the 19 people who were pardoned by President Bush on December 23 were John Allen Aregood for conspiracy to harbor and transport illegal aliens, Marie Elana Eppens and Steve Doyle Cavender for separate convictions of marijuana smuggling and sale and Donald Edward Roessler for embezzlement.  The sentence of Reed Raymond Prior, who was convicted of possession with the intent to distribute methamphetamines, was commuted.

Massie added: “I find it appalling that President Bush continues to place an apparently higher premium on freeing convicted drug dealers, human smugglers and embezzlers than he does for those who have served our nation honorably.  Ramos and Compean fought to preserve our nation’s integrity and order.  These other people tried to poison our communities and flout accepted morals and traditions.  The latter are the ones who pose a threat to our communities, and yet they are the ones receiving executive forgiveness.”

Project 21’s Massie wrote about the Ramos and Compean case in a commentary published in The Washington Times on December 28, 2007.  This commentary is available at http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2007/dec/28/justice-for-two.

Project 21, a nonprofit and nonpartisan organization sponsored by the National Center for Public Policy Research, has been a leading voice of the African-American community since 1992.  For more information, contact David Almasi at (202) 543-4110 x11 or project21@nationalcenter.org, or visit Project 21’s website at www.project21.org/P21Index.html.